Category Archives: new york

2012 Asian American International Film Festival (AAIFF) lineup

2012 Asian American International Film Festival (AAIFF) lineup

The 2012 Asian American International Film Festival (AAIFF) announced the lineup for the films showing July 25 – August 5, 2012 with screenings at Clearview Chelsea Cinemas, Asia Society and Museum, and The Museum of Chinese in America. In addition to the Opening, Closing and Centerpiece Presentations – SHANGHAI CALLING, KNOTS, and SUPERCAPITALIST, they revealed its full lineup with more than half of the Festival selections made or co-produced in the US. Many are first time directors, including actress turned director Lily Mariye’s MODEL MINORITY, telling the story of an underprivileged teenage girl surviving the treacherous world of peer pressure, drug dealers and dysfunctional families in L.A. There are also a number of returning filmmakers, including H.P. Mendoza’s horror film I AM A GHOST, about a girl trapped in a repetitive routine in Victorian times. And Rich Wong’s raunchy new film YES, WE’RE OPEN, a sharp-witted comedy about a modern couple testing their boundaries of love, sex and honesty.

Other films of note include Pearls of the Far East, Seeking Asian Female, Touch, Viette, and plenty of shorts. You can get tickets here before screenings are sold out.

2012 Asian American International Film Festival (AAIFF) Trailer

2012 AAIFF Launch Party in New York

2012 AAIFF Launch Party in New York

Are you ready for the arrival of the 2012 AAIFF(Asian American International Film Festival) in New York City? They are having their launch party this Thursday, June 28, 2012 at 6pm. The full lineup will be announced during the launch party, be there to catch a sneak preview of all the festivities and celebrate with them on this special occasion.

For the AAIFF screenings from July 25-August 5, 2012, three special presentations have already been announced including :

Opening Night: SHANGHAI CALLING
Centerpiece: SUPERCAPITALIST
Closing Night: KNOTS

See what other great films will be announced at the Launch Party. Here’s the details:

Where: Ugly Kitchen Restaurant, 103 First Ave, New York, NY, 10003
When: June 28th, 6-9PM
Drink Specials available until 9!
$5 glasses of wine, $4 beers, $6 cocktails.

Knots Trailer

2012 APAHM Tour with Jay Park x more

2012 APAHM Tour with Jay Park x more

In honor of Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, the 2012 APAHM tour returns. The much anticipated national APAHM Concert Tour casts the spotlight on none other than Korean-American superstar, Jay Park. The tour will make stops in Washington DC, New York, San Francisco and Los Angeles. Considered by many as a pioneering music artist, Jay Park is a multi-talented entertainer known for his vocals, song-writing, dancing and acting skills. With a growing fan base that crosses global boundaries, Jay Park is also known for his charismatic and confident personality, making him one of the most popular and admired artists of this generation.

Asian American artist will join Jay Park on stage as will. For the East Coast (Washington DC & New York), Dumbfoundead and Viennie V will be the opening acts. For the West Coast (San Francisco & Los Angeles), AJ Rafael and Blush will share the stage with him. Dumbfoundead is one of the first Asian-American hip-hop artists to break the underground hip-hop scene. Viennie V, a rising Asian-American pop singer, is known for her sultry vocals with eye catching music videos. Blush, a five-member Pan-Asian pop group, is known for their #3 Billboard Dance Chart hit, “Undivided feat. Snoop Dogg.” AJ Rafael is best known for his smooth vocals and posting entertaining videos on the web.

Here’s the 2012 APAHM Tour Schedule:
May 19 – Washington DC at Fillmore Silver Spring
May 20 – New York at Best Buy Theater
May 25 – San Francisco at Regency Ballroom
May 27 – Los Angeles at Club Nokia

If you can’t make it out to the show, don’t worry. You can still meet Jay Park at the following events:

Meet & Greet Schedule:
WASHINGTON DC
Tyson’s Corner Mall
8078 Tyson’s Corner Ctr, McLean, VA 22102
MAY 18, 2012 at 5PM

NEW YORK
34th St
134 W 34th St, New York, NY 10001
MAY 21, 2012 at 3PM

SAN FRANCISCO
Market St
768 Market St, San Francisco, CA 94102
MAY 24, 2012 at 5PM

LOS ANGELES
Western
3785 Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90010
MAY 26, 2012 at 4PM

LUCKYRICE Night Market x Notorious MSG in NYC

LUCKYRICE Night Market x Notorious MSG in NYC

NYC readers and foodies, luckyrice is reinventing the night market with the help of Notorius MSG. Serving up traditional as well as interpretive Asian street grub from both established as well as mom-and-pop joints, the Night Market recreates the celebratory chaos and delicious energy of the quintessential Asian night market experience with a distinct Brooklyn flavor. It’s a food experience that brings the flavor of Asian night markets from Taipei to Kuala Lumpur to the historic Archway under the Manhattan Bridge in DUMBO. Here’s more from Hong Kong Fever of Notorious MSG:

On Saturday, May 5, 2012, LUCKYRICE will re-invent their most popular event, the Night Market, and go hardcore on your sweaty buntocks.

Your taste buds will be blasted into a far-east wonderland with the authentic flavors of Asian Street food, served up with traditional and interpretive flair. This will be the quintessential Asian night market experience, captured in all its festive and sizzling ferocity.

And this is where it gets real. This year, me and my band, The Notorious MSG, will be proudly joining you on your multi-sensory street food experience. While your mouth is tasting the flavor of the far east, your ears will be tasting the power of our Chinatown beats. It will be a momentous evening of deliciousness. I am getting emotional just writing this.

It all goes down on May 5th, at the historic Archway under the Manhattan Bridge in DUMBO! See you there, like an Asian pear.

The Notorious MSG will get you Red Tonight.

LUCKYRICE Night Market x Notorious MSG in NYC

RepresentAsian: The Changing Face of New York Theater

RepresentAsian: The Changing Face of New York Theater

The Asian American Performers Action Coalition (AAPAC) released preliminary findings today on the representation of minority actors on New York City’s most prominent stages during the last five years. The full report, which will be released on Monday February 13th in conjunction with an industry roundtable, tallies the ethnic make-up of casts from all shows which opened on Broadway during this period and productions from sixteen of the largest not-for-profit theatres in New York City: The Atlantic Theatre Company, Classic Stage Company, Lincoln Center Theatre, Manhattan Theatre Club, MCC, The New Group, New York Theatre Workshop, Playwrights Horizons, Primary Stages, Public Theatre, Roundabout Theatre Company, Second Stage, Signature Theatre, Theatre for a New Audience, Vineyard Theatre and The York Theatre Company. It is the first report on minority casting in New York theatre ever to be released publicly.

Promisingly, the report reveals that the percentage of minority actors in relation to total number of roles has increased, hovering at or near 21 percent for the past four years compared to 14 percent five years ago. In addition, the number of minority actors cast in roles which were not racially specific (what is commonly referred to as non-traditional or inclusive casting) rose year to year, an indicator of creativity within the casting process and, possibly, the breaking down of traditional racial stereotypes.

Still, only 10.6 percent of all roles this past year were cast without regard to race and very few minority actors were seen in leading roles. With very few ethnic and minority stories in mainstream New York theatre during this period, expanding non-traditional casting seems to be the best way to secure more employment opportunities for minority actors.

Broadway & Non-Profit Past 5 YearsMost of the gains came from African-American performers who far outpaced their minority counterparts. Percentage of African-American performers in total number of roles doubled to 16 percent in the 08/09 and 09/10 seasons compared to 8 percent five years ago, dipping slightly to 14 percent this past year. African-Americans saw the largest increase in number of roles non-traditionally cast and were far more likely than any other minority group to be cast in a role that did not specify race. Though far behind in total numbers, Latino performers also doubled their visibility, accounting for 4 percent of total roles this past season compared to 2 percent five years ago.

Broadway Past 5 SeasonsAsian American performers do not seem to be a part of the trend towards more inclusive casting. Asian American performers saw their numbers drop, from 3 percent of all roles five years ago to 1 percent in the 08/09 and 09/10 seasons with a slight up tick to 2 percent this past year. While they were as likely as their Latino colleagues to be non-traditionally cast five and four years ago, in the past three years numbers of non- traditionally cast roles increased for Latinos while they decreased for Asians.

  • Asian Americans comprise 12.9 percent of New York City and is the city’s fastest growing major minority group, yet Asian actors accounted for only 1.6 percent of all available roles in new productions on Broadway, 3.3 percent of roles at non- profit companies and 2.3 percent of roles when looking at the industry as a whole.
  • There were only 18 Principal Broadway contracts for Asian American actors in the last five years.
  • Asian American performers are the least likely among the major minority groups to play roles that are not defined by their race.

Roles Non-Traditionally Cast Yr to Yr by Ethnic Grp AAPAC 2012
In response to these findings, AAPAC will hold an industry roundtable with prominent producers, artistic directors, directors, playwrights, agents and casting directors to have a dialogue on access and representation of minority actors on NYC stages and how best to overcome obstacles to more inclusive casting. It will be co-presented with Fordham University and will be moderated by Tony Award-winning playwright David Henry Hwang (Chinglish, M. Butterfly):

AAPAC and Fordham University present
“RepresentAsian: The Changing Face of New York Theater”
Monday, February 13th, at 7:00 pm
The Pope Auditorium at Fordham University
60th St/and Columbus avenue, just inside main entrance

To RSVP, send an email to aapacrsvp@gmail.com Seating is limited.

RepresentAsian: The Changing Face of New York Theater

Caught In The Act with Photographer Corky Lee

Caught In The Act with Photographer Corky Lee

Brooklyn Independent Television’s Caught In The Act (episode 44) follows photographer Corky Lee as he captures the rhythm and beauty at the annual Japanese Obon Dance Festival. This longtime photojournalist tells tales from his many years behind the camera. 40 years! That’s how long Corky Lee has aimed his camera and captured beautiful images on film. (Yes– REAL film.) Tag along as we join Corky at the annual Japanese Obon Dance Festival. Listen as he explains how the photos in the past influence how he shoots photos today. A photograph is a powerful thing.

Caught In The Act with Photographer Corky Lee